Anonymous wrote:My parents are both still slim. I've always been slim but admit I enjoy the very thin look so aim for about 130lbs at 5'11". It's not very hard to achieve though as long as I stick with intermittent fasting (an 8 hour eating window) and low carb high fat. I love beef, butter with everything, dark chocolate and tons if macadamias. Berries with heavy cream are another staple. I don't exercise but stay active with two small kids. 34 yrs old.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, I think you're asking the wrong question. Why don't you tell us a little more about yourself, what you typically eat and drink in a day, and we'll try to give some help.
I skip breakfast because it makes me sick eating that early in the morning. A few years ago, I did try eating it everyday but it seemed to make me hungrier for the rest of the day.
Lunches normally are salads or chicken & veggies or sandwich w/ a piece of fruit or soup
Dinner is my biggest meal and most days it's meat w/ veggies and a potato or some variation
Snacks are usually fruit, celery w/ ranch dip, protein bars, protein shakes, chips, crackers, deli meat, candy on a rare occasion (not really a big candy eater)
Drinks are water and tea; not a big fan of soda but will have it every once in awhile
I will eat fast food a couple times a week; for example, if I eat it for lunch on Mon, I won't eat it again until dinner on Tues or lunch again on Weds (I do know this needs to stop and it was a habit I picked up in college; growing up my parents didn't allow us to eat it except for special occasions)
Well good news OP - you don't eat very well and a few changes will make a huge difference.
Stop with the chips, crackers, ranch dressing, candy for snacks. In general, don't snack.
Stop eating fast food except very special occasions. Not weekly, not monthly...a few times a year.
How do you do this when there is a plethora of exotic and delicious cuisine in the DC area and being social here usually means eating out?
Anonymous wrote:I've never known a thin, happy, healthy woman.
Anonymous wrote:Does anyone only gain weight on certain parts of their body but no where else? I have this problem and my main problem is my stomach
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, I think you're asking the wrong question. Why don't you tell us a little more about yourself, what you typically eat and drink in a day, and we'll try to give some help.
I skip breakfast because it makes me sick eating that early in the morning. A few years ago, I did try eating it everyday but it seemed to make me hungrier for the rest of the day.
Lunches normally are salads or chicken & veggies or sandwich w/ a piece of fruit or soup
Dinner is my biggest meal and most days it's meat w/ veggies and a potato or some variation
Snacks are usually fruit, celery w/ ranch dip, protein bars, protein shakes, chips, crackers, deli meat, candy on a rare occasion (not really a big candy eater)
Drinks are water and tea; not a big fan of soda but will have it every once in awhile
I will eat fast food a couple times a week; for example, if I eat it for lunch on Mon, I won't eat it again until dinner on Tues or lunch again on Weds (I do know this needs to stop and it was a habit I picked up in college; growing up my parents didn't allow us to eat it except for special occasions)
Well good news OP - you don't eat very well and a few changes will make a huge difference.
Stop with the chips, crackers, ranch dressing, candy for snacks. In general, don't snack.
Stop eating fast food except very special occasions. Not weekly, not monthly...a few times a year.
Anonymous wrote:My parents are both still slim. I've always been slim but admit I enjoy the very thin look so aim for about 130lbs at 5'11". It's not very hard to achieve though as long as I stick with intermittent fasting (an 8 hour eating window) and low carb high fat. I love beef, butter with everything, dark chocolate and tons if macadamias. Berries with heavy cream are another staple. I don't exercise but stay active with two small kids. 34 yrs old.
Anonymous wrote:I'm probably skinny fat - as in not very toned - but I was an overweight teen so I understand the differences in my behavior now versus then.
I watch what I eat in the sense that I don't eat until overstuffed very often, I don't eat meat or drink alcohol to excess, and I don't eat dessert every night. I drink soda and juices but try not to have too many of them…when I was overweight I drank way way way too many calories.
I eat what I want in the sense that I don't deprive myself of cookies or Potbelly or pasta or sriracha mayo when I feel like it, but I try to stop at 3 cookies or a "skinny" sandwich and I don't do it 3 meals a day. I probably eat 2 servings of pasta, because who eats just one?
I find myself craving veggies or lighter food after two days of less healthy food. I think that means my body is calibrated to eat this way. It turns me off to eat to excess or to eat too many rich things in a row.
I often skip breakfast because I am just not hungry then. I probably get about 150 calories in my morning coffee via milk and sugar though.
I don't formally exercise. I should for health, but I only walk occasionally. I guess I'm pretty active during the day. For what it's worth, I am maybe 5 lbs more than when I exercised to excess, and that was pre-kids.
My BMI is about 19.5 and I am 35.
Anonymous wrote:A lot of it is genetics. My mil eats like a horse, mostly carbs and meat, she never works out and she is thin. The young women on her side of the family are all toothpicks.
Anonymous wrote:I was thin until motherhood and then gained 50 pounds and PCOS, an endocrine disorder that makes it very hard to lose weight, came to light. It felt like my previous skinny yoga type body had been swapped out for a completely different body.
But my DH was into low carb and got into intermittent fasting. When it was discovered I had PCOS, the prescription was - go low carb, which DH was already doing. So basically I hacked by body, using an understanding of my disorder. Now I eat low carb and practice IF. As my kids got older I was able to add cardio back and soon weight training. Now I can fit into my old sizes pre-pregnancy. I also eat a lot of healthy fats and stay hydrated.
Metformin was also prescribed and I lot additional weight after starting it. Higher blood glucose impedes weight loss.